skinnydipper
Well-Known Member
I am going to show my complete ignorance when it comes to protection sports.
As far I can understand, the dogs regard bite training as a game with the bite as a reward, the sleeve as a toy and possession of the sleeve a reward. (I've probably got that wrong). In pursuit, the sleeve seems to almost be offered to the dog by the decoy.
My questions are:
How do you transfer this game to real life (Police, Military, etc), when you would want the dog to bite and mean it and there would be no hessian sleeve or bite suit in sight?
Would a dog who excels at protection sports necessarily have what it takes to do the job for real? I know that CC will probably tell me its all down to genetics
I've probably got the terminology (and everything else) wrong but I hope you know what I mean and can sort me out.
As far I can understand, the dogs regard bite training as a game with the bite as a reward, the sleeve as a toy and possession of the sleeve a reward. (I've probably got that wrong). In pursuit, the sleeve seems to almost be offered to the dog by the decoy.
My questions are:
How do you transfer this game to real life (Police, Military, etc), when you would want the dog to bite and mean it and there would be no hessian sleeve or bite suit in sight?
Would a dog who excels at protection sports necessarily have what it takes to do the job for real? I know that CC will probably tell me its all down to genetics
I've probably got the terminology (and everything else) wrong but I hope you know what I mean and can sort me out.
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